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Tag Archives: Art
Holiday Open House Weekend in Seagrove
Jeff and I will be serving blueberry bars and homemade brownies, along with hot coffee… perhaps I should rethink that and make it ice coffee! Jeff has some really nice wood fired tea pots and tea ware in the shop, along with the Gong Fu Tea Set in the photo above.
The piggy banks have been flying out of here this month, even the ones that didn’t have wings. Out of the kiln this week came these two sweet piggies that weren’t spoken for. I am sure they will find new homes by the end of the weekend.
Here are the details:
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Jeff saves the day!
What a week it has been. Remember our firing over the weekend, the one with all of the Christmas orders? When we un-bricked the door on Monday, half the kiln was filled with hideous glazes. It seems that the bottom reached temperature and the rest was spotty. We also weren’t sure if our new batch of green glaze had some bad gerstley borate in it. I just wanted to puke. My mind raced ahead to letting everyone know that they wouldn’t have their pigs for Christmas and having to refund boatloads of money. Jeff told me to calm down.
He was going to re-fire everything in the raku kiln. We couldn’t re-fire in the bigger gas kiln, because we are getting ready to have the tank moved and we pretty much drained it with this firing.
Here are examples of the re-fire results in the raku kiln…
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Making a list, checking it twice…
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The End of an Era
Jeff Lalish was the founder of Northwood Pottery, and in the studio was a Japanese kick wheel that belonged to him. He stopped by during the clean out, and gifted the wheel to Jeff. He is so pleased to be it’s new owner. I am sure he will use it occasionally, but I also think it will make a nice display piece in our gallery.
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Resourcefulness
Living the life of a potter often means that you are resourceful by both nature and necessity.
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The Second Thanksgviving
Call me crazy, but I love to roast a turkey and cook all the sides that go with it. Thanksgiving day was spent with Jeff’s family, so on Saturday we had our second Thanksgiving feast at home. We invited a friend to join us. My grandmother’s platter, which must be over 100 years old, fits in nicely with our handmade dishes. I think the best part of the meal was enjoying it in our dining room, this is the first house that I have owned with a formal dining room!
In between the cooking I was waiting on customers in the gallery, and responding to questions from Etsy buyers. I am almost out of “in stock” piggy banks and it’s getting close to the time that I won’t be able to fill new orders for Christmas. I listed this little peach blossom piggy bank in the Etsy shop this morning. I have a feeling he won’t last too long…
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The ongoing pain of the studio move
Colder weather has finally arrived in Seagrove. Jeff and I were able to move our gallery indoors in the nick of time. There is still a lot of work to do, but at least our sales space is out of the elements. Our necks, backs, and hands are so very sore from scraping ceiling paint. The icing on the cake came yesterday when I stumbled off of the driveway and fell on my hands and knees. This is what happens when I walk, wearing clogs, trying to zip my fleece vest, all at the same time! Today I can add knee pain to my list of complaints. Getting older sucks.
Thankfully we have a reprieve from moving our kiln until we fire again in the next week or so. I don’t think our bodies could have done it this week, which was the original plan. We are quite stressed out being kiln-less during this holiday season. Typically we would be making work and firing up until the last minute. The timing of things just didn’t work out for us. The wonderful thing about this community is that we have had many offers to fire gas kilns at other potteries. We just might have to take them up on it.
The Celebration of Seagrove Potters show was down for us this year… we had lots of small sales, the big stuff didn’t sell. Fingers are crossed that we can make up for it in our own gallery. We need some good sales to get through the winter. Luckily, winter isn’t as long here as it is in New Hampshire.
I have to keep looking on the bright side!
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Progress…
The weather has finally been cooperating and things are moving along here at the pottery. The siding is all up and the last two windows are installed. Jeff got the rest of the insulation stapled in and has begun hanging the remaining two walls of the sheetrock. We are closed in and ready for winter.
The guy that has taken care of our lawn and land clearing came with his tractor and started preparing our kiln site. Next, we build forms and pour the pad. Right now I feel like we are being pulled in ten different directions at once. We have too many deadlines to meet by the Thanksgiving holiday and some of them aren’t going to happen. Sometimes you have to take a deep breath, keep moving forward, and do the best you can. Everything always falls into place in the end.
If you can’t get to the show, my Etsy shop is open 24-7. That’s where you’ll find these sweet little salt and pepper pigs.
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Something New
I feel like I have spent the last two years doing the same things over and over. I have had very little time to work on any new forms. One of the forms that has been bouncing around in my head is the conjoined condiment/dip bowl. Lori Buff, Future Relics Pottery, has made some sweet ones, and I have seen a few others around the interwebs. This week I spent a little time playing with the idea.
I threw the bowls and flattened one side while still on the wheel. I used the insert to the bat system to do the squishing. It’s a good surface against the clay, it releases without sticking.
After many, many days of sitting out (the rain and humidity has been horrendous) they were finally ready for assembly. I scored and slipped both pots and mashed them together really well. I have a fear of them cracking and separating. Time will tell. I only committed to three to start with.
I let them set up under loose plastic for another day, then played with handle ideas. In the end I prefer the middle handle. I wish I had decided that before the others sat too long to remove. But these are prototypes and if the design works, I can make better handle decisions.
Definitely a work in progress.
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